Advice on cleaning bloatware off of a new PC
Advice on cleaning bloatware off of a new PC

Lenovo ThinkBook 16 G6 ABP (AMD) in 16" Touch-screen Notebook AMD Ryzen 5 with 16GB Memory- 512GB SSD Gray 21KK0009US - Best Buy

I helped my 77 year old mother purchase a new laptop, and I want to be sure to get all the bloatware off of it, and set her up with with some better privacy options. I am aMac guy at home so I haven't done this kind of thing for many years. (I use Windows at work, so I'm quite familiar and capable, but obviously I have to rely on IT knowing what they are doing (they don't)). I did make sure to get the pro version of Windows 11. I'm going to set her up with Proton mail I think. This is the computer that is coming:
(Forgive me if this is not the correct place to post)
Wipe the operating system entirely and reinstall it from scratch. That would do a lot of it. And if the only thing she's really going to do is browse the internet, you might consider installing mint instead.
If you’re staying with windows and re-installing anyway (recommend this), make a ‘data’ partition, then link my documents, pictures etc. To identical folders on the data partition. Save user files on the data partition only.
That way, next time to reinstall it’s not a big deal at all, just relink the data folders. Your data is never touched and re installing is easy.
Or use Linux ;)
Edit: Something like this.
+1 pick Windows 10 / 11 Enterprise and/OR LTSB for a cleaner experience. Setting Windows as English (International) also seems to still get rid of a ton of garbage. https://www.w10privacy.de/english-home/ is also a great tool to mass disable telemetry and bullshit Windows components. Then set Windows to only security updates. You may also want to read this about what connections Windows makes and how to disable what you don't need further.
Linux Mint is good for beginners. If Windows is a necessity, use the Chris Titus WinUtil script to configure and remove bloat.
I tried to get her to go Mac and she is adamantly against learning any kind of new OS
No, it isn't.
I say this as someone who had their first UNIX class 35 years ago, and having been in IT since 1994.
I've run it as a test - to see how viable it is for family and friends. It has a LOT of usability issues for newcomers.
Power management is non-existant out of the box-as in it will keep right on running until the battery is dead.
Too many things require command-line management, e.g. that stupid printer notification thing that's on by default.
The default UI stuff is as bad as Windows is - the crap color choices mean one window is hard to distinguish from another. And to change it requires...editing text files. What is this, 1992?
Then the lack of software. No, Open/Libre office is not the same as MS Office. Just try to open an excel spreadsheet on Libre or Open and see what happens. Or anything more than the simplest Word doc.
Then there's no Publisher, no OneNote.
Sure, some of this is use-case, but how do you know that use-case won't show up in 6 months?
And really pity the power user who needs to remote into other machines. Now they gotta install VNC or RDP. Which one? OK, Remina seems like the VNC/RDP client of choice, again, which one? The descriptions in the repo say very little about what makes them different. OK, fine, I'll use this one. Now setup an RDP connection, only to find it won't connect, some kind of security error with TLS. OK, t-shoot a TLS error. Ah, they've deprecated TLS 1. Fine, reinstall TLS 1. Still no go. Wait, why is an RDP connection failing for TLS, it doesn't use TLS. Oh, choosing RDP in Remina doesn't change the security type to RDP. WTF?
OK, now that's fixed, I need to connect to a user machine to support them. What do I use since there's no remote control by default, unlike Windows, where at most you walk them through clicking
onetwo checkboxes to allow inbound RDP. Now I gotta walk a user through installing a VNC server, and all that entails. Great.Oh, your Logitech wireless mouse doesn't work out of the gate? Let's Google that. Oh, You gotta go install this software someone wrote so a wireless mouse can work. A mouse that has worked out of the box on Windows since ~2005.
On and on the merry-go-round goes. With Windows, that ride mostly stopped with Win2k in 1999, even more so with XP.
Sorry, as much as I'd like to see "The Year of the Linux Desktop", it's still a long way off. Distros like Mint are really impressive, but I won't be installing it for any family, because the support effort is still way too high.
This is the answer. If she is more comfortable with windows there are stripped down versions of 7 and 10, maybe even 11 that will have even less of the crap that msft throws in.
Unfortunately that stripped down versions are very unsafe because of removed antivirus features and sometimes they even include malware. I don't recommend that for a casual user who doesn't know what safety on the internet is